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http://www.archlinux.org/static/newslet … ug-04.html
As usual we discuss everything related to the Arch Linux Newsletter here, articles, contributions, and suggestions are welcome as well.
Once again, thanks for your outstanding support,
In the name of the Arch Linux Newsletter Team
Eduardo "kensai" Romero
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Maybe it is an aspect of being new, but I feel as if the whole Arch community lives together in a small town; I just get this sense of closeness.
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ext3undel could be useful!
The good thing, is already in AUR.
Maybe it is an aspect of being new, but I feel as if the whole Arch community lives together in a small town; I just get this sense of closeness.
Yeah we try our best to keep a good relation wih the users, if it weren't for their support... They have been great.
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Thank you for another awesome newsletter, keep up the awesome work!
Last edited by Roberth (2008-08-02 23:24:03)
Use the Source, Luke!
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Have to admit, I love the Bounce! ROTFLMAO!
Somewhere, just out of sight, the Penguins are gathering!
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Have to admit, I love the Bounce! ROTFLMAO!
Agreed. The entire newsletter is great, as always.
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Maybe it is an aspect of being new, but I feel as if the whole Arch community lives together in a small town; I just get this sense of closeness.
And the good part is that it's an elitist community (though you may not want to be called that way), which kind of makes you proud
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The newsletter links to this page:
http://www.ibm.com/developerworks/linux … 9&S_CMP=GR
Please have a look at trick number 4. I did not know that was possible, and it has disillusioned my about the current state of my computer's security. It looks like a person can just go and change my root password (because I don't have a grub password).
So while my friend isn't looking, I can play this "trick" on his computer as long as he has grub set up that way? Or did I read it wrong?
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The newsletter links to this page:
http://www.ibm.com/developerworks/linux … 9&S_CMP=GRPlease have a look at trick number 4. I did not know that was possible, and it has disillusioned my about the current state of my computer's security. It looks like a person can just go and change my root password (because I don't have a grub password).
You should be able to do the same trick using a livecd and chrooting into your root partition, which makes setting a grub password useless to prevent such things, IIRC.
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Great newsletter again, it was a nice read.
But this time, I would like to make a few corrections if it is not too late.
# Allan McRae has been adding PKGBUILD prototypes into some of the abs packages.
in the abs package (there is just one)
# Ronald van Haren went on vacations soon after being named a developer. What kind of example is this for the rest of us, huh? Just jocking with you man, but as I'm really enjoying making the devland section again, I might just steal it from you. :-D
joking
# Hugo Doria started translating the Arch Linux installer, and his efforts turned into a complete Arch Linux translation project.
The second link given here points to a thread where it was still the old location of the page.
from http://archlinux.org/pipermail/arch-dev … 07016.html : http://hdoria.archlinux-br.org/uploads/ … -i18n.html
the page has been moved since then
http://archlinux.org/pipermail/arch-dev … 07098.html : http://dev.archlinux.org/~hugo/arch-i18n/
# carlocci came up with a really good community contribution called pactree, a dependency tree viewer.
Maybe it is worth mentioning that pactree is now included in pacman-contrib package : http://aur.archlinux.org/packages.php?ID=15326
pacman roulette : pacman -S $(pacman -Slq | LANG=C sort -R | head -n $((RANDOM % 10)))
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even though I guess that the "bounce" is meant to be funny, it looks more like any other immature I-don't-like-ubuntu posting
why did the author actually choose to install the whole gnome desktop if he wanted something much more lightweight from the beginning - stupidity?
"a satirical article for entertainment purposes only" c'mon guys, why don't you bash windows instead?
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@shining : All fixes applied, check them again for if you see another error.
That was fast!
Anyway, I checked, and found a minor punctuation issue :
Update: shining points out, it might be "worth mentioning that pactree is now included in pacman-contrib package.
Only one " looks strange
By doing this check, I noticed another thing, It is not an error, just an outdated statement :
# The unstable repository is going to be dropped soon. Some of the packages that were worth keeping have been moved to extra.
It should be
# The unstable repository is going to be dropped soon. Some of the packages that were worth keeping have been moved to extra.
Update : It has been dropped now!
Last edited by shining (2008-08-03 19:33:43)
pacman roulette : pacman -S $(pacman -Slq | LANG=C sort -R | head -n $((RANDOM % 10)))
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@shining, once again everything fixed. Man, you should be my second proofreader.
I was thinking first proofreader! (I'm short on time )
Dusty
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Galdona wrote:The newsletter links to this page:
http://www.ibm.com/developerworks/linux … 9&S_CMP=GRPlease have a look at trick number 4. I did not know that was possible, and it has disillusioned my about the current state of my computer's security. It looks like a person can just go and change my root password (because I don't have a grub password).
You should be able to do the same trick using a livecd and chrooting into your root partition, which makes setting a grub password useless to prevent such things, IIRC.
Though you usually can also prevent booting from livecd in the bios, and then protect the bios with a password. But the bios can be reset too. So It is only an extra barrier.
I guess encrypting the filesystem is a better solution.
pacman roulette : pacman -S $(pacman -Slq | LANG=C sort -R | head -n $((RANDOM % 10)))
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kensai wrote:@shining, once again everything fixed. Man, you should be my second proofreader.
I was thinking first proofreader! (I'm short on time )
Well, I don't know if I would feel comfortable with that position, my priority is still pacman development. And depending on the period, I can also be a bit short on time.
But it would indeed be better if I could provide these corrections before the newsletter is published.
Btw, if I remember correctly, there used to be a newsletter git repo on http://projects.archlinux.org/ . Is it gone now?
pacman roulette : pacman -S $(pacman -Slq | LANG=C sort -R | head -n $((RANDOM % 10)))
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Btw, if I remember correctly, there used to be a newsletter git repo on http://projects.archlinux.org/ . Is it gone now?
Hmm, we still have the repo, but its not listed there. My guess is Eduardo asked it be taken down so people couldn't preview our bloody aweful work in progress before its published.
But we can probably find some way to get you access to it if you're interested.
Dusty
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The repo's still there, it's just not world readable anymore. Eduardo didn't want any sneak previews
Oh and the people with access are: jason,eduardo,dusty,ronald
The suggestion box only accepts patches.
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*grins* So everybody found out about my secret? *grins*
Yeah, with the help of mastermind neotuli, the newsletter repo in projects.archlinux.org was hidden. Not even all developers have access now, I'm looking at you Allan.
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I'm looking at you Allan.
Ruin all my fun...
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The bounce section is great
Segmentation fault (core dumped)
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even though I guess that the "bounce" is meant to be funny, it looks more like any other immature I-don't-like-ubuntu posting
why did the author actually choose to install the whole gnome desktop if he wanted something much more lightweight from the beginning - stupidity?
"a satirical article for entertainment purposes only" c'mon guys, why don't you bash windows instead?
Don't worry, man. All distros will be covered soon enough.
Every month a new distro. I will always use the first thing that I get when I visit the downloads page, that's one of the conditions. Try to use it as if it were Arch, and see how far it goes.
It's not meant to be scientific. It's just for fun. Oh, and it was also meant to sound like a whinage of a person who's been using too much Arch.
EDIT: I could review the Windows Vista if we get one as a donation.
Last edited by foxbunny (2008-08-06 10:06:37)
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